Emperor Hirohito.
Hirohito
No, Japan didn't immediately refuse after the bombing of Hiroshima. After the bombing, Emperor Hirohito (the Japanese leader during the Second World War) went into consultation with the Imperial War Council (of Japan) where they were deciding whether or not to surrender. However, three days after the bombing of Hiroshima, America bombed Japan again, this time in Nagasaki. Roughly a week after the Nagasaki bombing, Emperor Hirohito on 15 August 1945 announced surrender via radio broadcast. He officially surrendered in written agreement later that year on 2 September 1945.
Emperor Hirohito was the emperor of Japan in that time.
Against the Axis powers, of which Japan was part of. (The Bomb was dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan). The emperor of Japan at the time was Hirohito, and Hitler was in control of Germany and Europe.
Japan never had a president. Instead, they had an emperor. The emperor at that time during WWII was Emp. Hirohito. He died in 1989.
There were none left. Once the two bombs were dropped on Japan, there were none left in reserve. It would have taken a long time to build and create new ones.
The Emperor of Japan.
Emperor Hirohito
An ultimatum was issued to Japan from Potsdam, but no mention of atomic bombs was made in it as they were classified and the only people at Potsdam cleared to discuss them were Truman and Churchill.The first time the Japanese were told of the atomic bomb was after the bombing of Hiroshima.
The atomic bombing of the Japanese city of Hiroshima .
10 mIlli0n japanese. A+0mic bombing in HIroshima, Japan.
Japan was bombed with conventional bombs during much of WW II under President Franklin Roosevelt. However, he died prior to the ATOMIC bombing of Japan, and Harry S Truman was President at that time.